Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 2 – As protests
against the Novorossiisk court’s decision to declare a translation of the Koran
extremist continue to spread, Russia’s leading academic specialist on Islamic
law is appealing for calm, pointing out that the court’s action is far from the
last word in this case and that even if it is upheld on appeal, no one need “throw
away” the translation.
Demonstrations and petition
campaigns continue to spread across the Russian Federation about the September
17 decision of a district court on a translation of the Koran prepared by an
Azerbaijani scholar and published by the Saudi authorities (golosislama.ru/news.php?id=19565, tatar-centr.blogspot.com/2013/09/blog-post_279.html,
tatar-centr.blogspot.com/2013/09/blog-post_5793.html
and youtube.com/watch?v=ZzW31PWig2I&feature=youtu.be).
Commenting
on the case Leonid Syukiyainen, a specialist on Islam and especially Islamic
law at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics says that Muslims should not allow
themselves to become agitated about the Novorossiisk decision because it has
not yet entered into force (islamnews.ru/news-142078.html).
Appeals are certain, and even if
superior courts overrule the court of first instance, Syukiyainen says, it won’t be necessary for anyone
to “throw away” the Kuliyev translation.
It will only be necessary for those who own one to be careful about sharing
it with others or displaying it in public.
Because appeals have not been exhausted,
the scholar says, the fact is that this translation has not been “prohibited.”
Moreover, and this is a point few have made in the course of the discussion
about this decision, he argues that this prohibition is not just about a book
but about “a specific publication of a specific publishing house in a particular
year.”
Remembering that is important,
Syukiyainen continues, because there are other editions of the same translation
issued by other publishing houses. He notes that he has one of these at home
and says that “this translation has not been prohibited.” And he suggests he has no plans to get rid of
it.
But what if the court’s decision is
confirmed? What should a Muslim who has
a copy of the Kuliyev translation as published in 2002 in Saudi Arabia worry
about? According to Muslim leaders, the
Moscow specialist says, no one has the right to “throw away the Koran.” Indeed,
that is “a sin before the Creator and a crime.”
Syukiyainen cites the words of Sheikh
Abdulkhay, one of the senior parishioners of Moscow’s Cathedral Mosque, on this
point. Abdulkhay says that he would go
to prison before he would throw away the Kuliyev or any other translation of
the Koran (islamnews.ru/news-141948.html).
Theoretically, of course, the Moscow
scholar acknowledges, all Muslims who do retain the specific translation that
the Novorossiisk court has declared extremist if that decision is confirmed
could face charges of preserving or disseminating extremist materials, but that
is not going to happen.
Muslims who do own a copy of this
particular edition can avoid problems simply by not showing it to others, he
suggests. They can “buy another edition
and use it,” even as they keep this edition on their bookshelves. “Try not to
take it out of the house in order that one not generate an unnecessary reaction
and thus avoid having to show that you are not a camel.”
“I don’t see any problems here,”
Syukiyainen says. And he refers to his
own experience: As a scholar he has various books that have been declared “extremist”
by Russian courts.” What was he supposed to do with them? “Go out and burn
them? I am a researcher, I use these books for research purposes, and no one
can prohibit me from doing so.”
“There are research goals and other goals.
But if people have serious doubts, let them go to a lawyer and receive
qualified legal guidance,” the scholar says. “Or, I repeat, let them buy
another edition of this translation since it is not the Kuliyev translatin but
this specific edition” that the Novorossiisk court declared extremist.
As “NG-Religii” reports today, there
are at least two appeals in the works, one by the lawyer who represented Kuliyev’s
interests in the Novorossiisk trial who points, as Syukiyainen does, to
numerous errors of fact and reason in the decision and another by a Muslim
activist who believes politics are behind the court’s action (ng.ru/facts/2013-10-02/1_translator.html).
In her article in the weekly, Lidiya
Orlova points to two problems that this case has highlighted: differences of
opinion among Muslims over whether a translation of the Koran is a Koran – many
believe that that text exists only in Arabic – and the lack of “a single
canonical translation” of the Koran or its meanings into Russian.
Many countries, including
post-Soviet states like Uzbekistan, have prepared such translations, and Orlova
suggests that the appearance of such a translation would end challenges to the
holy text of Islam or of any other religion as manifestations of extremism even
under the terms of existing Russian law.
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